narrator ·
The Kite Runner is narrated by Amir four days after the
final events of his decades-long story.

point of view · The narrator speaks in the first person, primarily describing events that
occurred months and years ago. The narrator describes these events subjectively,
explaining only how he experienced them. At one point, another character briefly
narrates a chapter from his own point of view.

tone · The tone is confessional, expressing profound remorse throughout the
story

tense · Past tense with extended flashbacks

setting (time) · 1975 through 2001

setting (place) · Kabul, Afghanistan; California, United States

protagonist · Amir

major conflict · After failing to intervene in the rape of his friend Hassan, Amir wrestles
with his guilt and tries to find a way to atone for his actions.

rising action · Forced out of Afghanistan by the Soviet invasion, Amir flees to the United
States, where he tries to rebuild his life until an old friend offers him a way to
make amends for his past.

climax · Amir returns to Kabul, where he finds Hassan’s son, Sohrab, and encounters
Assef, the man that raped Hassan twenty-six years earlier.

falling action · Amir rescues Sohrab from a life of physical and sexual abuse and struggles
to learn how he and Sohrab can recover from the traumas each has
endured.

themes · The search for redemption; the love and tension between fathers and sons;
the intersection of political events and private lives; the persistence of the
past

motifs · Rape; irony; regressing in time

symbols · The cleft lip; kites; the lamb

foreshadowing · Baba wonders if Amir will be able to stand up for what is right when the
time comes; Baba worries that Islamic fundamentalists will one day control
Afghanistan; Hassan threatens to shoot Assef’s eye out; Assef vows revenge on
Amir.